|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australia: state Labor leader positions himself for a federal
political career
By Richard Phillips
19 August 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Bob Carr, the longest serving premier of New South Wales (NSW),
Australias most populous state, suddenly resigned on July
27 precipitating a wave of eulogies from the media, the resignation
of two senior state cabinet ministers, and a scramble by Labors
political machine to find a replacement and rearrange the state
cabinet.
Throughout the past year Carr, who was appointed NSW Labor
leader in 1988 and elected to state government in 1995, where
he remained for the next 10 years, repeatedly insisted that he
would contest the next state election in 2007. But with the property
market in decline and working class resentment growing against
his pro-market policies, Carr clearly saw a difficult state election
ahead and decided it was time to step aside.
The premier did not bother to notify his deputy leader until
two hours before he officially informed the press and then said
that he had decided to quit, after spending one of these
beautiful Sydney weekends with his wife. While he claimed
to have no interest in pursuing a political career in the national
parliament, his assertion should be given no credence whatsoever.
An ideologically committed right-winger, Carr, who has long
dreamt of a career in federal politics, is not heading for early
retirement. Rather, his resignation opens the way for his appointment
to a safe Labor Party seat in the federal parliament, a shadow
ministerial position and possible future challenge to current
Labor leader Kim Beazley.
Carrs political record
Carr joined the Labor Party in the early 1960s, aged 15, and
was immediately attracted to the strident anti-communism of its
right-wing faction. He worked assiduously against left-wing elements
inside the ALPinitiating disciplinary action against a Young
Labor member for supporting the Viet Cong during the Vietnam Warand
attended events organised by the Australian Association for Cultural
Freedoma CIA-funded think-tank.
On graduating from university, Carr became a journalist for
the ABC and the Bulletin and education officer for the
NSW Trades and Labor Council. In 1984, he was given a safe Labor
seat in state parliament and four years later appointed state
Labor leader.
In December 1989, Carr visited Europe to celebrate the liquidation
of the East German regime and other Eastern European Stalinist
governments. Describing it as an ideological victory tour,
Carr aligned himself with the extreme-right triumphalism of the
time, pompously proclaiming the collapse of Stalinism as a great
victory for capitalism and the market.
With widespread media backing, Carr became state premier in
1995, after winning a narrow victory against the Fahey Liberal
government. He immediately embarked on a program of cutting basic
social services, corporatising state-owned enterprises and doing
whatever he could to attract investment to NSW.
Having promised to halve hospital waiting lists during the
1995 election, Carr soon dropped his pledge, starving state health
services of adequate funds. Elective surgery waiting lists doubled
and then tripled to over 10,000, and mental health services became
scandalously inadequate.
Spending on public education as a proportion of the state budget
dropped to just over 20 percent, down from 25.7 percent in 1997.
At the same time, Carrs government provided millions to
private schools.
Cuts to public transport, manning levels and basic maintenance
produced an escalating operational crisis on state transport,
including three major rail accidents in which 21 people were killed
and scores seriously injured. Government cuts to services, daily
train cancellations and inadequate basic maintenance have created
a transport nightmare for metropolitan and rural residents alike.
Workers compensation was reformed to provide a
huge windfall for corporate business. Under the new legislation,
insurance premiums for businesses were slashed, with payments
to injured workers reduced and their ability to claim damages
drastically cut.
Likewise, as investors and developers made a fortune from the
Sydney property boom, with house prices almost doubling in the
past decade, Labor slashed public housing, forcing up the number
of homeless people in the state to 25,000.
Law and order
To divert attention from the growing inequality and poverty
that these policies produced, Carr maintained a constant stream
of law and order legislation and other measures to
boost police powers and blame workers and youth for their predicament.
In preparation for the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games, the NSW Labor
government introduced wide-ranging police powers and collaborated
with the Howard government to allow the military to be mobilised
throughout the city in the event of any terrorist attack.
Carrs longstanding get tough with crime campaign
saw the abolition of the right to remain silent for so-called
youth gang suspects, heavier sentencing and other attacks on basic
civil liberties. When challenged that these measures would not
eliminate crime, Carr retorted that he was not going to be influenced
by anyone who adheres to a 1970s civil liberties agenda.
When working class youth from Middle Eastern backgrounds were
found guilty of gang rape in 2001, Carr called for racial profiling
and urged the Howard government to introduce stricter immigration
laws, claiming foreign criminals and potential terrorists were
able to enter Australia too easily.
Following the September 11 terror attacks in the US and the
Bali bombing in October 2002, Carr took his right-wing populism
to a new level, supporting police raids on scores of innocent
Indonesian and Middle Eastern Muslim families in joint state and
federal operations. Since then he has been in the forefront of
demands for stepped up attacks on democratic rights throughout
the country.
In the lead up to the US-led invasion of Iraq, Carr banned
a high school students antiwar street march in Sydney and
mobilised riot squad forces against the youth, the only political
leader in Australia to do so.
NSW currently has some of the most repressive anti-terror legislation
in Australia. Police have been given a virtual carte blanche to
arrest individuals, bug or raid homes and offices, seize property,
documents and any other items on the pretext of stopping terrorist
acts. Whole suburbs can be classified as target areas,
and subjected to these repressive measures.
Other legislation has changed Freedom of Information provisions
to prevent any access to information on police operations. And
in violation of international law, the Carr government has reversed
the presumption of bail for so-called terrorism related offences
and in one case applied it retrospectively.
Carrs new police powers have not been restricted to Muslims
or immigrants. In the past 18 months the state Labor government
has mobilised scores of heavily armed police against rioting youth
in the inner city Sydney suburb of Redfern and the outer western
suburb of Macquarie Fields. These poverty-stricken areas have
been placed under siege with dogs, anti-riot police, helicopters
and other officers unleashed against residents.
New forces required
In the aftermath of the London terror bombing and a few days
before announcing his resignation, Carr wrote to Howard urging
him to convene a national anti-terror summit and to adopt the
laws now being introduced by the Blair Labor government. These
include unprecedented attacks on freedom of speech and the abolition
of citizenship and deportation of anyone accused of encouraging
terrorism.
Weve got to plug every potential gap and thats
why Id like the Commonwealth to go line by line, clause
by clause through Tony Blairs legislation and see whether
its relevant here, he declared.
When Carr announced on July 27 that he was resigning the Sydney
Morning Herald devoted no less than 10 pages over the next
two daysa full-page editorial and several op-ed articlesvariously
describing the premier as an intellectual, serious
writer visionary, genius and political
titan. A week later the praise continued, with the newspaper
publishing a lengthy poem on Carr in which he was glowingly referred
to as the Prince!
These overblown and absurd tributes can only be understood
within the context of a serious leadership crisis for Australias
ruling elite. Hostility is mounting against the Howard government
over the war in Iraq and its attacks on democratic rights and
living standards, but this is not translating into support for
the Labor opposition. Opinion polling for Labor leader Beazley,
the third federal leader since 2001, remains at disastrous levels
and, like the trade unions, the party is fast becoming a political
irrelevance.
The praise for Carr is aimed at preparing the way for him to
take a tilt at a federal role, to try to shore up Labors
fortunes, and the two-party system itself. His record demonstrates
that he will not hesitate to implement, on behalf of the powers-that-be,
whatever savage attacks on democratic rights and living standards
they require.
See Also:
After the London bombings:
Australian prime minister advocates further attacks on civil liberties
[2 August 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |